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Sunday, October 31, 2010
I didn't stab the Fox Snooz watchers last night,
France spends approximately 10% of its gross domestic product (GDP) on health care and in terms of health expenditure is second in the European Union (EU) only to Germany, in terms of health expenditure (OECD 2005); this level has remained relatively stable over the past five years.
National health care spending as a percentage of U.S. gross domestic product (GDP)—the total spending on goods and services in the United States—has been rising steadily over the past 40 years. In 1960, it accounted for slightly more than 5 percent of the total. By 2002, health care spending was about 15 percent of GDP
FOXNEWS.COM HOME > HEALTH
U.S. Trails Others in Health Care Satisfaction
Friday, October 29, 2004
Ah...ummm... think that has improved since 2004?
Campaign Desk — July 13, 2009 10:58 AM (Columbia Journalism Review)
Health Care in France—and in America
A journalist’s observations
By Trudy Lieberman
Tea Party movement funding
Ok, now go laugh, I'm not beyond scatological humor, are you?
Billy Connolly - Colonoscopy
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Rally for sanity pics
Sanity and fear, meeting in the middle
By Jason Horowitz, Monica Hesse and Dan Zak
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, October 31, 2010; A1
Update 1/11/10 Read Chris Hedges scathing assessment of the celebration.
My response to Hedges?
Dear Mr. Hedges,
When was the last time YOU tried to organize a union?
Sirota: It's the stupidity, stupid
Creators Syndicate
"...The first, by Harvard's Michael Norton and Duke's Dan Ariely, finds that Americans grossly underestimate how much inequality our economy produces. Among the survey respondents, the vast majority said they believe the richest 20 percent own 59 percent of the wealth when, in fact, that quintile owns 84 percent of the wealth. In other words, in spite of the data, many believe our system produces the moderate equality we desire..."
Sirota: It's the stupidity, stupid - The Denver Post
Yemenis try to send bombs to US synagogues, now there's a shocker
Jamie Doward and Mark Townsend
guardian.co.uk, Saturday 30 October 2010 17.18 BST
Security officials say explosive packages found on US-bound aircraft in UK and Dubai were meant to bring them down
"..It has emerged the devices were discovered only after a tip-off from Saudi intelligence. "This… started with good information from the Saudis," the US homeland security secretary, Janet Napolitano, said. "We were then immediately able to work with other countries, particularly the UK and the UAE, to segregate these packages, to begin the analysis about what they were..."
Hmm, I never thought I'd say this, but thank you, Saudi Intelligence.
Update. Monday 11.1.10 The Saudis know this idiot.
Citizens United fallout this election season
'It’s pretty clear that corporations now have the ability to spend unlimited amounts of money to take on people like my boss.'
"... In the wake of the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision, neither group is required to disclose its donors..."
I told you so.
Friday, October 29, 2010
Does this 'splain Cheney's last heart attack?
On second thought, no, it wouldn't have caused a heart attack, the company is based in Dubai.
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Thanks Keith, the ballot's in the mailbox now
Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
Video kind of morning
The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
Barack Obama Pt. 1 | ||||
www.thedailyshow.com | ||||
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Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Monday, October 25, 2010
Swimming in warm water can take deadly toll on body
And now you know why I hate swimming with non-swimmers. "Oh yay, isn't the water wunnerful?" the brainiacs ask, and it's fucking 88 degrees Fahrenheit, with an air temp of 90 degrees Fahrenheit. No, because I spent so many hours in the water, working hard in it, that that 85 degree water temp is HOT to me. I thought maybe between 68 and 75 was great, but these guys think between 77 and 82. Obviously, 87 degree water temp can be fatal. I always hated the Brawley meet because there was no way to keep the outdoor pool from getting too hot to compete in. It was like trying to race in a really big bathtub.
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Reading Now
Republican Gomorrah by Max Blumenthal
(c) 2009
Frankly, this book does not look like a whole lot of fun to read, but better to be aware than ignorant. *sigh*
Friday, October 22, 2010
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Michael Moore: Why Republicans Are Always Worried That Their Pet Corporations Might Face Real Free Market Competition
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
How is a request for an apology an olive branch?
FRIDAY, OCT 22, 2010 12:10 ET
Ex: Clarence Thomas was porn-obsessed
After 19 years, the justice's former girlfriend speaks out about how checking out female co-workers was his "hobby"
BY TRACY CLARK-FLORY Lillian McEwan just broke her silence of 19 years to talk about Clarence Thomas' obsession with large breasts and pornography. Lillian McEwan might want to consider changing her phone number.
And just look at all the rethugs jumping to his defense.
Oct. 20, 2010
Thomas' Wife Seeks Apology From Accuser Anita Hill
Wife Of Justice Clarence Thomas Asks Anita Hill, His Accuser, To Apologize After 19 Years
lThomas' wife seeks apology from accuser Anita Hil
Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2010
"WASHINGTON (AP) - Anita Hill is refusing to apologize for accusing then-Supreme Court justice nominee Clarence Thomas of sexually harassing her, in an issue that Thomas' wife has reopened 19 years after his confirmation hearings....
...He broke a 16-year silence about the hearings in a 2007 book, "My Grandfather's Son," writing that Hill was a mediocre employee who was used by political opponents to make claims she had been sexually harassed...."
I don't give a good goddamn whether Hill was used by political opponents of Thomas. Unfortunately it did not work and we are going to be stuck with Thomas' whorish decisions till he croaks and he has made many decisions that have helped turn this COUNTRY "mediocre," at best and a toxic steaming pile at worst.
Monday, October 18, 2010
William Lerach on Corporate Power, Corporate Crime and the Failure of the Democrats to Confront Wall Street
Great article.
Hmmm. Suddenly I'm hearing the 'NPR is brought to you by balabbity, blabity, Lerach and blablahblah law firm' thing in my head. I have no idea if this is the same Lerach and so and so firm. If I really gave a crap I'd find out. I don't.
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Snicker snicker, tee hee hee
Attorney general joins local law enforcement officials in opposing legalization of marijuana. Prop. 19 supporters say the U.S. has no legal ground to challenge the measure.
Well, maybe Holder doesn't get California, that's understandable, but this fool?
"...Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca, who is a co-chairman of the main opposition committee, released the letter at a news conference at his headquarters Friday, flanked by two former DEA heads, the district attorney and the Los Angeles city attorney.
"He is saying it is an unenforceable law and the federal government will not allow California to become a rogue state on this issue," Baca said. "You can't make a law in contradiction to federal law as a state. Therefore Proposition 19 is null and void and dead on arrival..."
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Chile miner rescues 24 and counting
update
They got quite the preview Thursday of what lies ahead. On their first full day of fresh air, the miners were probably the 33 most in-demand people on the planet.
A Greek mining company wants to bring them to the sunny Aegean islands, competing with rainy Chiloe in the country's southern archipelago, whose tourism bureau wants them to stay for a week.... Los treinta y tres
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Pipelineistan's New Silk Road
Posted by Pepe Escobar
at 9:40am, October 12, 2010.
"...Pepe Escobar, that edgy, peripatetic globe-trotting reporter for one of my favorite on-line publications, Asia Times, has been doing just that for TomDispatch readers as he explores the geography that undergirds our civilization, the pipelines that crisscross Eurasia through which flow energy -- and trouble. This, then, is his fourth "postcard" from what he likes to call Pipelineistan. The first in March 2009 began laying out a great, ongoing energy struggle across Eurasia and the Great Game of business, diplomacy, and proxy war between Russia and the U.S. that went with it.
In May of that year, he plunged eastward into tumultuous Central and South Asia and the expanding battleground that, in Washington, goes by the neologism Af-Pak (for the Afghanistan-Pakistan theater of operations). Next, in October, he headed west toward Europe and another developing struggle, which he dubbed "Pipelineistan’s Ultimate Opera", over just how natural gas from the Caspian Sea would reach Europe. Now, in his first stop of 2010, he heads where, it seems, anyone interested in energy -- maybe anyone interested in anything at all -- more or less has to head these days: China and the new Silk Road of pipelines that offer the former Middle Kingdom a partial shot at future energy security and Washington future anxieties of all sorts. Tom... "
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Making Campaign Ads More Honest
Does anybody here believe that politics anywhere in the US remotely resembles democracy?
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost
Reading now
Globalization and its Discontents by Joseph Stiglitz (c) 2002
I watched the National Geographic 3 hr special with Jared Diamond called "Guns, Germs and Steel" and it is definitely worth watching, although the books are always better. Diamond's information always makes me feel better about being a Westerner because it reminds me that human nature is exactly the same all over the planet. Only the geography changes the way societies evolved and developed.
Friday, October 08, 2010
I find this funny
By London correspondent Rachael Brown
Posted 48 minutes ago
And when are we going to DO something about the Chinese screwing around keeping the yuan artificially low?
All I hear is blah blah blah
Thursday, October 07, 2010
I love Grey's Anatomy
California voter's registration deadline
The voter registration deadline is October 18, less than two weeks away.If you haven't yet registered, please do so. If you have moved and haven't re-registered to vote, please do so. And if you're going to be out of town on Election Day, please request a vote-by-mail ballot.
Sunday, October 03, 2010
finished reading Dismantling the Empire
(blogger just dumped what I wrote and I'm not rewriting it, so here are a couple of quotes from the book)
p 74
"From its inception the CA has labored under two contradictory conceptions of what it was supposed to be doing, and no president has ever succeeded in correcting or resolving this situation. Espionage and intelligence analysis seek to know the world as it is; covert action seeks to change the world, whether it understands it or not. The best CIA exemplar of the intelligence -collecting function was Richard Helms director of central intelligence (DCI) from 1966 to 1973 (who died in 2002). The great protagonist of cloak-and-dagger work was Frank Wisner, the CIA's director of operations from 1948 until the late 1950s, when he went insane and , in 1965, committed suicide. Wisner never had any patience for espionage and other forms of intelligence collecting.
Weiner quotes William Colby, a future DCI (1973-1976) on this subject. The separation of the scholars of the research and analysis division from the sips of the clandestine service reared two cultures within the intelligence profession, he said, "separate, unequal, and contemptuous of each other." That critique remained true throughout the CIA's first sixty years.
[As I read this I thought and noted to myself "Turf wars are endemic in situations where law enforcement and public safety organizations overlap. Endemic because it is inevitable. Inevitable because testosterone = turf wars."]
p 165
It is hard to imagine any sector of the American economy more driven by ideology, delusion and propaganda than the armed services. Many people believe that our military is the largest, best equipped, and most invincible among the world's armed forces. none of these things is true, but our military is, without a doubt the most expensive to maintain. Each year, we Americans account for nearly half of all global spending, an amount larger than the next forty-five nations together spend on their militaries annually.
And Johnson goes on to prove this statement. I was surprised at how many books Johnson noted that I have read.
Saturday, October 02, 2010
Boo-gate?
The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
Indecision 2010 - Taliban Dan & Boo-Gate | ||||
www.thedailyshow.com | ||||
|
How perfectly lovely, just in time for Halloween. So all you holloweenies want to git all dolled up like yer heroine Molly McMooseturd? Lovely in the flaming turd costume don't you think?
Dude. I'm so punny today.
News Corp Gives $1 Million to U.S. Chamber of Commerce
News Corporation, the parent company of Fox News, has donated $1 million to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, a powerful business lobbying group that was recently accused of tax fraud and money laundering by two national watchdog groups. News Corp's big-dollar donation is the second it has made to Republican interests in recent months. In June, 2010 News Corp gave another $1 million to the Republican Governors Association. The Chamber plans to spend $75 million to influence the 2010 election, making it the the top spender on congressional races of any interest group. The parent companies of other media outlets, like General Electric (which owns NBC) and Disney (which owns ABC), have also made political donations, but in lesser amounts more evenly divided between Democrats and Republicans. News Corp's recent huge gifts to Republican interests raise questions about whether the company has crossed an ethical line.
Friday, October 01, 2010
Ballot research today
San Diego County Primary Election Analysis
Editors Roundtable transcript | Friday, June 11, 2010
Ok, off to find out more.
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Meg Whitman's campaign is toast
Want to know why there are never changes in the immigration laws? Because rich people want cheap, disposable labor, until it becomes a problem in a political campaign of course.
For 9 years the maid worked for her, and for 7 of them she knew the maid was illegal, and Whitman comes up with this bullshit?
"As soon as we found that she was an illegal immigrantwe did what we had to do as an employer, which was to let her go," Whitman said. "But all of the documentation that we had said that she was legal."
Republican hypocrisy on display. Again. Man, I haven't even looked at my ballot, and I just want this election over with. I'm vaguely amused and very cynical every time I see a political ad, and I knew this bitch was going to hang herself from the first time I saw her ads. When one of my friends told me that she liked her I asked her where she got her information from? When she stumbled on the answer I told her to turn off the TV, Google Whitman and wait a while.
Heh.